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The email address is not made public. It will only be used if you need to be contacted about your account or for opted-in notifications.
Several special characters are allowed, including space, period (.), hyphen (-), apostrophe ('), underscore (_), and the @ sign.
Provide a password for the new account in both fields.
Contact settings
Allow other users to contact you via a personal contact form which keeps your email address hidden. Note that some privileged users such as site administrators are still able to contact you even if you choose to disable this feature.
Your virtual face or picture.
One file only.
800 KB limit.
Allowed types: png gif jpg jpeg.
Images larger than 1024x1024 pixels will be resized.

Configure the meta tags below.

Use tokens to avoid redundant meta data and search engine penalization. For example, a 'keyword' value of "example" will be shown on all content using this configuration, whereas using the [node:field_keywords] automatically inserts the "keywords" values from the current entity (node, term, etc).

Browse available tokens.
Basic tags
Simple meta tags.
The text to display in the title bar of a visitor's web browser when they view this page. This meta tag may also be used as the title of the page when a visitor bookmarks or favorites this page, or as the page title in a search engine result. It is common to append '[site:name]' to the end of this, so the site's name is automatically added. It is recommended that the title is no greater than 55 - 65 characters long, including spaces.
A brief and concise summary of the page's content that is a maximum of 160 characters in length. The description meta tag may be used by search engines to display a snippet about the page in search results.
A brief and concise summary of the page's content, preferably 150 characters or less. Where as the description meta tag may be used by search engines to display a snippet about the page in search results, the abstract tag may be used to archive a summary about the page. This meta tag is no longer supported by major search engines.
A comma-separated list of keywords about the page. This meta tag is no longer supported by most search engines.
Advanced
Meta tags that might not be needed by many sites.
Geo-spatial information in 'latitude; longitude' format, e.g. '50.167958; -97.133185'; see Wikipedia for details.
A location's two-letter international country code, with an optional two-letter region, e.g. 'US-NH' for New Hampshire in the USA.
A location's formal name.
Geo-spatial information in 'latitude, longitude' format, e.g. '50.167958, -97.133185'; see Wikipedia for details.
A link to the preferred page location or URL of the content of this page, to help eliminate duplicate content penalties from search engines.
Robots
Provides search engines with specific directions for what to do when this page is indexed.
Use a number character as a textual snippet for this search result. "0" equals "nosnippet". "-1" will let the search engine decide the most effective length.
Use a maximum of number seconds as a video snippet for videos on this page in search results. "0" will use a static a image. "-1" means there is no limit.
Set the maximum size of an image preview for this page in a search results.
Do not show this page in search results after the specified date
Used for paginated content by providing URL with rel='next' link.
Used for paginated content by providing URL with rel='prev' link.
Describes the name and version number of the software or publishing tool used to create the page.
Used to indicate the URL that broke the story, and can link to either an internal URL or an external source. If the full URL is not known it is acceptable to use a partial URL or just the domain name.
Define the author of a page.
An image associated with this page, for use as a thumbnail in social networks and other services. This will be able to extract the URL from an image field if the field is configured properly.
The number of seconds to wait before refreshing the page. May also force redirect to another page using the format '5; url=https://example.com/', which would be triggered after five seconds.
Indicate to search engines and other page scrapers whether or not links should be followed. See the W3C specifications for further details. Note: this serves the same purpose as the HTTP header by the same name.
Details about intellectual property, such as copyright or trademarks; does not automatically protect the site's content or intellectual property.
This meta tag communicates with Google. There are currently two directives supported: 'nositelinkssearchbox' to not to show the sitelinks search box, and 'notranslate' to ask Google not to offer a translation of the page. Both options may be added, just separate them with a comma. See meta tags that Google understands for further details.
Used to rate content for audience appropriateness. This tag has little known influence on search engine rankings, but can be used by browsers, browser extensions, and apps. The most common options are general, mature, restricted, 14 years, safe for kids. If you follow the RTA Documentation you should enter RTA-5042-1996-1400-1577-RTA
Tell search engines when to index the page again. Very few search engines support this tag, it is more useful to use an XML Sitemap file.
Used to control whether a browser caches a specific page locally. Not commonly used. Should be used in conjunction with the Pragma meta tag.
Control when the browser's internal cache of the current page should expire. The date must to be an RFC-1123-compliant date string that is represented in Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), e.g. 'Thu, 01 Sep 2016 00:12:56 GMT'. Set to '0' to stop the page being cached entirely.
Used to control whether a browser caches a specific page locally. Not commonly used. Should be used in conjunction with the Cache-Control meta tag.
These meta tags are used to confirm site ownership for search engines and other services.
A string provided by Baidu.
A string provided by Bing, full details are available from the Bing online help.
A string provided by Facebook, full details are available from the Facebook online help.
A string provided by Google, full details are available from the Google online help. Multiple values may be used, separated by `,`. Note: Tokens that return multiple values will be handled automatically.
A string provided by Norton Safe Web, full details are available from the Norton Safe Web online help.
A string provided by Pinterest, full details are available from the Pinterest online help.
A string provided by Pocket, full details are available from the Pocket online help.
A string provided by SIWECOS, the free website security scanner.
A string provided by Yandex, full details are available from the Yandex online help.
A string provided by Zoom, full details are available from the Zoom online help.
See Schema.org definitions for this Schema type at https://schema.org/Place.
REQUIRED. The type of place.
The name of the place.
The telephone number of place.
The url of the place.
geo
The latitude of a location. For example 37.42242 (WGS 84).
The longitude of a location. For example -122.08585 (WGS 84).
Geographic coordinates of the place.
address
The street address. For example, 1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy.
The locality. For example, Mountain View.
The region. For example, CA.
The postal code. For example, 94043.
The country. For example, USA. You can also provide the two-letter ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code.
Physical address of the place.
A description of the item.
image
Whether this image is representative of the content of the page.
Absolute URL of the image, i.e. [node:field_name:image_preset_name:url].
The primary image for this item.
These meta tags are designed to point visitors to versions of the current page in other languages.
This should point to the version of the page that is for the main or primary locale, e.g. the original version of an article that is translated into other languages.